Nov 4
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The finance scene has changed over the last ten years for the small to medium business owner since the introduction of GST.

Prior to the year 2000 the majority of business people would go out to purchase a vehicle or equipment for their business and finance it on a lease or a commercial hire purchase depending on their accountant’s advice and the business’ setup.

This made it quite simple for their accountants as all they had to do was add up the lease/HP payments for the financial year and that was the tax deduction.

Chattel Mortgage Finance

In the current market over 90% of business finance is done on a product called Chattel Mortgage.

The reasoning behind this is that the items being purchased, whether motor vehicles or plant and equipment, all attract GST on the sale. The client can fund the total amount of the item including GST from the financier and are then able to claim the GST component (input credit) back it their next BAS.  Businesses can claim the GST up front regardless of whether they are cash or accrual reporting.

This allows the business owner to make a capital purchase and offset the input credit against the GST payable.

The business will also be able to claim depreciation and interest on the viagra mortgage as under this facility the client owns the goods from day one and the financier takes a mortgage (security) over the chattel. This differs from a lease or hire purchase agreement where the financier actually owns the goods until the last payment is made.

Lease Finance

Some businesses do still lease their vehicles or plant and equipment depending on their individual circumstances and their accountant’s advice.

The benefit to businesses funding their capital purchases on lease are that the finance company owns the goods and claims the GST so the business purchases an item exclusive of GST and pays the GST on the lease repayment.

An example of this would be;

A motor vehicle is say $44,000 including GST before on road costs

The financier would fund $44,000 and pay the dealer and claim the $4,000 GST back.

The client would have a lease for $40,000 over 48 months with a residual value of 30%.

This would mean that the client pays a monthly lease rental of approx $860 (including $78 GST) for 4 years and at the end of the term the Residual value would be $12,000 plus GST.

Related posts:

  1. The Finance Maze – Operating Leases

5 comments so far...

  • Stephen Glanville Said on November 4th, 2009 at 2:51 pm:

    Hi Matt :-)

    Another edifying post mate thanks :-)

    When I started my now dead and hopefully soon to be re-incarnated small business, I explored the rent/buy option for capital equipment. Unsuccessfully, I might ad…the institutions I applied to took so long to first approve and then backflip on approvals, that they caused irreparable damage in the context of my available funding and schedule…but that’s a whole ‘nuther story.

    Do you have a preference for leasing v rent/buy?

    Cheers

    Stephen G

    Matt Reply:

    Hi Stephen,

    Thanks for your comments.

    “Do you have a preference for leasing v rent/buy?”

    On smaller items that would be obsolete in a fewyears the ideal way to purchase these would be on a rent/buy option as you can just hand them back and move on.

    With larger items a Lease or Chattel mortgage would be the way to go in my opinion as you do have the option of owning the goods at the end and may realise a profit on the sale.

    Have a good one Stephen.

    Regards

    Matt

    Stephen Glanville Reply:

    Thanks Matt :-)

    I got told, and I hope I’m remembering this correctly, that one of the main advantages with rent/buy is that rentals are not required to appear on some accounts (e.g. Profit/Loss and Capital Accounts). Is that correct? And if so, why is that an advantage, if at all?

    Cheers

    Stephen G

  • Matt Said on November 4th, 2009 at 3:30 pm:

    Hi Stephen,

    Thanks for your comments :)

    The rent/buy option along with a normal Finance lease are considered “Off Balance Sheet” transactions as you do not own the goods the financier does.

    There is no real advantage in having it “Off balance sheet’ except that it does not mess up your asset to liability ratios.

    The main advantage is that the rent/ buy or lease payment is 100% tax deductable as opposed to interest and depreciation claimable on a Chattel Mortgage.

    I am not an accountant so the tax advantages would depend on individual situations

    Regards

    Matt

  • Matt Said on April 12th, 2010 at 5:59 pm:

    Thanks for your comments

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